Yeah. Just as you can see in Nat Geo or Discovery. Minor ships don't have facilities to collect crumbs, as the Apollo, the Mercury and the Gemini NASA capsules.
That's why they never ate sandwiches or cookies in that missions. Poor sacrificed guys.
The International Space Station has several active crumb removers, e.g. vacuum cleaners on walls, and even portable ones.
2007-03-29 12:48:16
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answer #1
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answered by fedebicho 3
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In a plastic bag so the crumbs don't fly
2007-03-29 19:40:05
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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They sure do. I remember an astronaut complaining about NASA giving them saltine crackers. Crumbs + Zero G = short circuit.
2007-03-29 20:31:23
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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LOL.. you are such a dork, but in a nice way so dont take it personal.
I am guessing the crumbs do fly everywhere.... imagine cookies???
2007-03-29 19:45:17
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Open mouth, insert muffin!
2007-03-29 21:12:05
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answer #5
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answered by bender_xr217 7
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Through a tube. It's reconstituted
2007-03-29 19:39:25
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answer #6
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answered by Experto Credo 7
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You eat it before it is cooked.
mmmmmmmm muffin dough.
2007-03-29 19:48:12
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answer #7
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answered by Labsci 7
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Its outerspace....you do everything backwards. You know usually you eat it then after it does it thing it comes out the other end.......In outerspace you sit on it and it works its way through the other way.
2007-03-29 19:41:21
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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not if the muffin is compacted and you bite the muffin chew it and swallow
2007-03-29 19:39:52
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answer #9
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answered by theca_va 3
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yes, but it doesn't matter because bugs won't come in space
2007-03-29 19:40:01
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answer #10
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answered by V for Vendetta 1
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